1. Explaining the Continuity of U.S. Foreign Policy 2. An Empire of Client States 3. Acquiring Client States 4. The Routine Maintenance of Client States 5. Client Maintenance by Interventions 6. Hostile Intervention Against Enemy States 7. The Persistence of Client-State Imperialism
David Sylvan is Professor of International Relations and Director of publications at the Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva. Previously he was Associate Professor at the University of Minnesota and Associate and Assistant Professor at Syracuse University. His research and teaching interests are foreign policy analysis, intervention, international relations theory, sociology of international relations, social theory, topics in political economy, computational modelling and research design. Stephen Majeski is Professor of Political Science and Department Chair at the University of Washington, Seattle. His research and teaching interests are international relations theory, international conflict and cooperation, U.S. foreign policy, foreign policy analysis, mathematical modeling, computational modeling, agent-based modeling, experimental analysis and statistics.
"Empirical diplomatic history and theory at its best. This
masterful, rigorous scholarship takes a long-term perspective,
informed by rich case studies, to challenge in a pathbreaking
interpretation many conventional wisdoms about the wellsprings of
American foreign policy. Clear yet sophisticated at the same time -
a rare combination. Must reading for future research." Charles W.
Kegley, Distinguished Pearce Professor of International Relations
Emeritus at the University of South Carolina, USA; Vice Chair of
the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs, and
President of the International Studies Association 1993-1994"In
this lucid, erudite, penetrating book, David Sylvan and Stephen
Majeski turn standard analyses of U.S. foreign policy upside down.
The tale they tell is one of means shaping ends, of instruments
driving policies, of bureaucracies creating rather than serving
national interests. Sylvan and Majeski's cybernetic account of U.S.
foreign policy is shockingly compelling - conceptually sound and
empirically rich. This book is a must-read for any serious student
of U.S. foreign policy."David A. Welch, Professor of Political
Science, Director, Trudeau Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies,
University of Toronto, Canada"Sylvan and Majeski flip a Gestalt
switch to illuminate the continuity of US foreign policy. They
consider it the product not of some conjectured grand strategy, but
of the policy instruments available to policymakers. By examining
US foreign policy from its actual means, not its putative ends,
Sylvan and Majeski produce a fresh and compelling account that
amounts to a more nuanced understanding of the inner workings of
imperial politics after colonialism."Gavan Duffy, Syracuse
University, USA
"Empirical diplomatic history and theory at its best. This
masterful, rigorous scholarship takes a long-term perspective,
informed by rich case studies, to challenge in a pathbreaking
interpretation many conventional wisdoms about the wellsprings of
American foreign policy. Clear yet sophisticated at the same time -
a rare combination. Must reading for future research." - Charles W.
Kegley, Distinguished Pearce Professor of International Relations
Emeritus at the University of South Carolina, USA; Vice Chair of
the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs, and
President of the International Studies Association 1993-1994 "In
this lucid, erudite, penetrating book, David Sylvan and Stephen
Majeski turn standard analyses of U.S. foreign policy upside down.
The tale they tell is one of means shaping ends, of instruments
driving policies, of bureaucracies creating rather than serving
national interests. Sylvan and Majeski's cybernetic account of U.S.
foreign policy is shockingly compelling - conceptually sound and
empirically rich. This book is a must-read for any serious student
of U.S. foreign policy." - David A. Welch, Professor of Political
Science, Director, Trudeau Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies,
University of Toronto, Canada"Sylvan and Majeski flip a Gestalt
switch to illuminate the continuity of US foreign policy. They
consider it the product not of some conjectured grand strategy, but
of the policy instruments available to policymakers. By examining
US foreign policy from its actual means, not its putative ends,
Sylvan and Majeski produce a fresh and compelling account that
amounts to a more nuanced understanding of the inner workings of
imperial politics after colonialism." - Gavan Duffy, Syracuse
University, USA
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